Frontfax

Sets up a development environment for frontend developers that can't access the source code. Recently, at the last couple of places that I've been working, it's been somewhat impossible to access the source code of the working project, and therefore, I've been downloading the source via the web, working on it and then posting it back to backend developers to insert in to the project. This is somewhat annoying, so I've developed Frontfax.

Your Workspace

Tries to find it in your workspace (assets/images/logo.png). If found the file is returned and the process stops here.

Proxies the request to the configured proxy server and returns the result.

Proxying

The greatest feature of Frontfax is it's ability to target a proxy server for files that don't exist on your computer. To configure the proxy target open config/default.json and change the proxy option:

{

...

"proxy":"http://www.the.site.im.working.on.com"

...

}

URL Configuration

The images, js, css URLs are can configured, but these files will always be accessed from you assets directory.

The static directory is the last place the server looks before proxying the request. This is good for HTML files. You do not need to configure the URL for this as it will consider the root to be accessible from the static directory.

To change the URLs open the config/default.json file and edit the [image|css|js].paths urls.

Response replacement

Sometimes you may need to automatically change the content from the response. For example, you may wish to change a URL from http://assets.mysite.com to /images. This can be by configuring the "replacements" in the config/default.json file. Here's that example:

{

"base":false,

"proxy":"http://www.mysite.com",// this URL will automatically get replaced with ""

"replacements":{

"http://assets.mysite.com":"/images"

}

}

As of v0.2.0, you can also use regular expressions by adding your replacements to a $RegExp object:

The regular expression needs to be passed as a string. Hence why you see the double backquotes.

LESS

To install LESS support run the following command in your project directory frontfax add --less.

While you're working on any less files they will automatically be converted in to css and placed in the css directory.

The advantages are of writing you CSS as LESS are:

Pre-processing functionality

Syntax is the same as CSS, so even if you don't want to use LESS's functionality you can just write plain CSS.

You can compile a selection of files in to one.

When writing your less files, it is recommended to have one "main" file that includes all the requirements. This means that only one file needs to be uploaded to the production server after development.

Here's an example. Try to split your work in to many easy to read files.

/* assets/header.less */

.header{

.nav{

/* nav styles */

}

.logo{

/* logo styles */

}

}

/* assets/article.less */

.article{

.picture{

/* picture styles */

}

.teaser{

/* teaser styles */

}

}

/* assets/main.less */

@import'header';

@import'article';

Now you can point to one CSS file (/my/configured/css/path/main.css) and have all your CSS returned:

/* build/main.css */

.header.nav{

/* nav styles */

}

.header.logo{

/* logo styles */

}

.article.picture{

/* picture styles */

}

.article.teaser{

/* teaser styles */

}

JS Combine

While you're working on any js files they will automatically be combined from assets/js/src/*.js into assets/js/main.js.

Templating

While working on your static files in the static directory, you can also use a variety of templating languages.